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Medical History, 2000, 44: 389-404
Illustrations from the Wellcome Library
Wellcome and "The Great Past"
AMANDA ENGINEER*
In 1928 Henry Solomon Wellcome, facing the Royal Commission on
NationalMuseums and Galleries, elaborated on his deep fascination
with "the great past".'The passion of this remarkable American-born
entrepreneur, co-founder of thepharmaceutical company Burroughs
Wellcome & Co and "obsessive collector ofmedical artefacts,
instruments and books",2 is amply evident in the WellcomeArchive,
which is held by the Wellcome Trust in the Contemporary Medical
ArchivesCentre (CMAC), London.The Wellcome Archive comprises the
personal papers of Henry Wellcome and
records of his various research laboratories and museums. It is
one of the largestcollections administered by the CMAC, second only
in size to the mammoth archiveof the Family Planning Association.3
Stored in nearly 700 archive boxes and describedin a 4 volume, 728
page catalogue, it contains a staggering 6436 item references.4
Inaddition to hard copy format, the collection is also accessible
electronically on adatabase. This database has an excellent search
facility which acts effectively as anindex to the entire archive,
and is a most welcome feature to those seeking a firstpoint of
entry into the multi-volume catalogue. The database is currently
only inthe public searchroom of the Wellcome Library, although
there are plans to makeit available via the Wellcome Trust Library
Websites in the next few years.The project to assemble, arrange,
catalogue and make available to the public the
body of collections now known as the Wellcome Archive was funded
by the Trustin 1996, and completed in three years thanks to the
sterling work of two CMACarchivists, Jennifer Haynes and Isobel
Hunter. The result is a rich, wide-ranging
* Amanda Engineer, BA, DAA, AssistantArchivist, Contemporary
Medical ArchivesCentre, The Wellcome Library for the Historyand
Understanding of Medicine, The WellcomeTrust, 183 Euston Road,
London, NWI 2BE.
For reading and commenting on this paper andsupplying
information I should like to thankJulia Sheppard, Dr Lesley Hall,
John Symonsand Isobel Hunter.
'CMACIWA/HSW/OR/L.1 p. 38. Evidence tothe Royal Commission on
National Museumsand Galleries 1928-1929. Typescript of
writtenanswers by Henry Wellcome who was quotingfrom the Museum
Handbook. See also the
introduction by Wellcome in brochures for theHistorical Medical
Exhibition 1913, in which hebegins "with the object of stimulating
the studyof the great past, I am organising an Exhibitionin
connection with the history of medicine,chemistry, pharmacy and the
allied sciences",CMAC/WA/HMM/PB/1 and 5.
2Robert Rhodes James, Henry Wellcome,London, Hodder and
Stoughton, 1994. Frontsleeve notes.
3CMAC/SA/FPA.'The Wellcome Archive database contains
6436 records on Level 6, which is record type"Item".
5http://www.wellcome.ac.uk.
389
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Amanda Engineer
resource which will open up potentialities for research in a
number of areas. Itreveals a great deal about Henry Wellcome's
personal life, his scientific, cultural andhistorical enterprises
and contains much of relevance to his commercial operations,which
were often closely related. (The records of Burroughs Wellcome
& Co andThe Wellcome Foundation Ltd are currently held in the
archive of Glaxo-Wellcomeplc in Greenford, Middlesex.) The
catalogue provides an invaluable means of accessto this very
complex and often chaotic archive, reflecting the many interests of
HenryWellcome, the complicated structure of his businesses and the
convoluted custodialhistory of the records up to 1996. Identifying
the provenance and original order ofevery part of the collection
was an archivist's ultimate nightmare. From as early asthe 1930s,
archives had been arranged and re-arranged; extracted from and to
thebusiness archives; stored in different locations; listed and
held by different departmentsof the Wellcome Institute; expanded by
additional "new" papers, the provenance ofwhich was not recorded;
damaged or destroyed; and distributed to other institutions,most
significantly Wellcome's correspondence with Sir Henry and Lady
Stanley,given to the Royal Geographical Society in 1936. Those
researchers brave enoughto take the plunge will see that there are
some structured filing series, but for themajority of material an
arrangement has been devised from sketchy provenanceinformation,
evidence contained in the archives themselves and a good deal
ofarchival logic and common sense.Although not immediately obvious
from a quick perusal of the catalogues, this
archive covers a quite extraordinary range of topics. It is
divided into eight distinctcollections. The largest comprises
records of the Wellcome Historical MedicalMuseum (513 boxes),
followed by the Personal Papers of Henry Solomon Wellcome(110
boxes) and the Wellcome Bureau of Scientific Research (55 boxes).
Four smallercollections of records are those of the Chemical,
Physiological and Tropical ResearchLaboratories and the Museum of
Medical Science. There is also a collection ofphotographs and
slides generated by the various Wellcome institutions.
The Personal Papers of Henry Solomon Welicome (1853-1936)
The Personal Papers of Henry Solomon Wellcome (CMAC/WA/HSW)
provide anintriguing insight into the man's multi-faceted and
unusual life from his late teenageyears up to his death in 1936
aged eighty-three. They cover his pharmaceuticaleducation and early
career in the USA, the establishment of Burroughs Wellcome& Co
in London in 1880, family relationships, personal financial and
legal affairs,marriage and his only son, and his wide-ranging
social, intellectual, cultural andhistorical activities.An
extensive series of 'General Correspondence'6 spanning 1881-1903
covers the
period when he was first in London establishing the business
with Silas MainvilleBurroughs and living a very flamboyant
lifestyle. Most notably represented are hisinvolvement in
freemasonry, yachting and the American Society. Since HenryWellcome
drew no boundaries between business and private life, these papers
also
6CMAC/WA1HSW/CO/Gen.
390
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Wellcome and "The Great Past"
contain a great deal about the commercial side of his
activities.7 As a whole, theseries paints a vivid picture of London
society in the late nineteenth and earlytwentieth centuries and
reads like a Who's Who of people, companies, clubs,
charities,societies and associations. Although much of the
correspondence is of an ephemeralnature, it does show that Wellcome
was a compulsive and successful networker. Hisconnections were
impressive and varied: Andrew Balfour, Henry Stanley, May
FrenchSheldon, Lord Kitchener, Joseph Chamberlain, Roger Casement,
Marie Corelli,Genevieve Ward, Oscar Wilde, J Passmore Edwards, Lady
Randolph Churchill,Hiram Maxim, W M Flinders Petrie, E A Wallis
Budge, Florence K Upton, theCarlyle House Memorial Trust, National
Association for Employment of Epilepticsand the Savage Club are but
a few names which appear in the correspondence series.
Sadly, Wellcome's relationship with and marriage to Syrie
Barnardo, daughter ofthe celebrated philanthropist Thomas Barnardo,
are poorly documented. Theirmarriage in 1901, when Syrie was only
21 years old and Wellcome in his late forties,was troubled from
early on. A legal separation was agreed in 1910 followingWellcome's
accusations of infidelity against his wife during their stay in
Ecuador in1909. Syrie vehemently denied her husband's claims, but
it had nevertheless becomeclear to her that she and Wellcome had
"virtually nothing in common".8 Divorcewas granted to Wellcome in
1916, shortly after the birth of Syrie's illegitimatedaughter by
the writer Somerset Maugham. After the breakdown of their
marriage,Wellcome destroyed all Syrie's correspondence with him and
little evidence remainsof their early relationship. An intimate
side of Henry Wellcome and possibly hisattitudes to love, marriage
and women, is lost for ever. Surviving documentation inthe
collection covering his marriage and divorce is on a mainly
superficial and legallevel. That Wellcome's two most important
loves were his business empire andcollecting interests can only be
speculation.
Happily, the archive does include papers relating to Henry and
Syrie's sonMounteney.9 These cover his birth and christening in
1903, education, health,holidays, life as a young man living on a
farm in Sussex and the settlement fundmade by his father and
administered by the Wellcome Trustees. In particular, materialshows
that the young Mounteney was at the centre of a tug of war between
hisestranged parents. Each employed medical and educational experts
to support theirviews on how he should be brought up. While
Wellcome favoured a strict regime ofexercise, fresh air and
instruction, Syrie advocated a governess, afternoon naps
andsmothering affection. Despite the wrangling which took place
during his childhood,Mounteney's life was evidently a happy
one.
Wellcome's personal life, family, relatives, friends, and
childhood and adult homesare illustrated by a substantial number of
photographs.'0 The portraits of a sombreand dignified man are
complemented by a series of "costume" photographs takenduring his
early years in London in the 1880s. These show him dressed up as
amonk, a warrior, sailor and a Hamlet type character, and reveal
the lighter side ofHenry Wellcome. Syrie's beauty is splendidly
captured in a series of studio portraits
7Conversely, material relating to Henry 8 Rhodes James, op.
cit., note 2 above, p. 299.Wellcome's private life can be found in
the 9CMAC/WA/HSW/MO.commercial archives held by Glaxo-Wellcome.
'°CMAC/WA/HSW/PH.
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Amanda Engineer
Figure 1: The Wellcome family outside their home, The Nest,
Hayes, Kent, c. 1908. Syrie frontleft, Mounteney front middle,
Henry front right, with an unknown woman and a
nanny.(CMAC/WA/HSW/PHO/D. 13, Wellcome Library, London.)
by Lafayette Ltd, the noted society photographers, and G Nitsche
of Lausanne.There are also a good many photographs taken on the
Wellcome family's travelsaround Europe between 1905 and 1910, many
ofwhich include Syrie and Mounteney.Only one family portrait is
held, which is a rarity including Henry, Syrie andMounteney all
together outside their home in Hayes, Kent (Figure 1).
Mounteney'schildhood is gaily illustrated. An album of photographs,
evidently compiled forpresentation to friends and relatives, shows
Mounteney leaping and running freelyin the grounds and resting on
the arm of his father's chair. There are also photographsof him
with his mother and even playing in a wigwam in the garden.
In addition there are records to interest those not specifically
concerned withHenry Wellcome's personal life. For example, there is
a good deal of materialrelating to native Americans. Wellcome's
long-term charitable involvement with thecontroversial Father
William Duncan and his Christian missionary work among theTsimshian
Indians of British Columbia is documented in a series of
correspondence,
392
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Wellcome and "The Great Past"
..j~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~....
/- -'vp F
Figure 2: The Metlakahtla brass band outside the church
building, Metlakahtla, Alaska, takenduring Wellcome's visit
1916-1917. (CMAC/WA/HSW/PHO/B.3, Wellcome Library, London.)
reports and other papers" (which is supplemented by material in
the WellcomeLibrary American Collections). Wellcome extolled
Duncan's Christian settlementsfor the Indians, known as Metlakahtla
and New Metlakahtla, in Alaska, in TheStory of Metlakahtla, which
he published privately in 1887 (Figure 2). Brought upin the
American Mid-West, Wellcome was interested in native American
culturefrom an early age. A number of references to native
Americans can be found bysearching the database, for example, a
search on 'Pocahontas' will bring up a list offour items.
Archaeology was another of Wellcome's principal interests.
Excavationsin Jebel Moya in southern Sudan, 1910-1914, and Lachish,
or Tell Duweir, inPalestine, 1932-1938, financed by Wellcome (he
was personally involved in theformer), are well represented.'2 As
well as material on important finds, there is muchrecording the
philanthropic treatment of the native work force and for those
withmore gory tastes a report on the murder of the archaeologist J
L Starkey by Arabbandits in 1938. A further series of
correspondence relating to staff recruitment andmanagement and the
excavations at Jebel Moya can be found in the archive of
theWellcome Historical Medical Museum.'3
The Wellcome Historical Medical Museum
The largest and most complex section in the Wellcome Archive is
that of theWellcome Historical Medical Museum (CMAC/WA/HMM). The
Museum was
" CMAC/WA/HSW/ME. '3CMAC/WA/HMM/CO/Ear/303-321.12
CMAC/WA/HSW/AR/Jeb and AR/Lac.
393
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Amanda Engineer
undoubtedly one of Wellcome's greatest achievements.'4 Its sheer
size and scopealmost defies belief. It has been calculated that by
the early 1930s the aggregatenumber of objects in Wellcome's
collection (whilst not of comparable dimensionsand value) was five
times larger than that of the Louvre in Paris and during the1920s
"its annual expenditure on acquisitions exceeded that of the
British Museum".15In all, he spent a total £400,000 on it.
Wellcome's hobby of collecting antiquitiesand curios began in the
late nineteenth century. In 1903, utilizing the wealth
generatedfrom his business enterprises, he began in earnest to
collect material for an exhibitionto illustrate man's history and
life with special reference to health and medicine.Originally
planned to mark the twenty-fifth year of trading by Burroughs
Wellcome& Co in 1904, the Museum did not begin to be arranged
until 1911. A selection ofthe collected artefacts together with
material borrowed from other sources were firstput on display in
1913 at 54a Wigmore Street, at the 17th International
MedicalCongress, London."6 The Museum was reopened as the Wellcome
Historical MedicalMuseum in 1914 and functioned successfully
through the 1920s. By this timeWellcome had developed a much
grander scheme for a permanent museum; however,this plan never came
to fruition during his lifetime. In 1932 the Museum closed andwas
moved from Wigmore Street to the new Wellcome Building in the
Euston Road,but was still undergoing rearrangement when Wellcome
died in 1936 and did notreopen until after the Second World War.'7
Transfer of objects to other institutionsbegan soon after
Wellcome's death and continued until 1985. The Wellcome Galleriesat
the Science Museum, London, hold by far the largest portion of the
collections,which were transferred on a permanent loan basis in
1977.
Despite being best known as a historical medical collection, in
scope it was muchwider. The Museum took shape according to the
development of Wellcome's wide-ranging interests and those of key
staff members over the years. It embraced notonly the history of
medicine but also anthropology, archaeology, art and folkloreamong
other things. The clearest expression of Wellcome's vision for the
Museumis provided in his evidence to the Royal Commission on
National Museums andGalleries, 1928-1929. He revealed that his
interest in "the great past" dated fromwhen, aged four, he found a
Neolithic stone implement and his father told himabout the Stone
Age and Neolithic periods: "that excited my imagination and
wasnever forgotten."'8 He regarded the Museum as a place for
serious academic researchand study and an important anthropological
institution, believing the history ofmedicine from prehistoric
times onwards to be an important part of anthropology.Its famous
'Hall of Primitive Medicine' formed an obligatory introduction to
the
" For an account of the development and 17 The Museum initially
re-opened to visitorsdispersal of the Wellcome Historical Medical
at 28 Portman Square in 1948. At the end ofMuseum, see John Symons,
Wellcome Institute for 1954 it was returned to the Wellcome
Building atthe History of Medicine: a short history. London, 183
Euston Road where it functioned until theThe Wellcome Trust, 1993.
transfer decision by the Wellcome Trustees in the
" See Ghislaine M Skinner, 'Sir Henry 1970s.Wellcome's Museum
for the Science of History', " CMAC/WA/HSW/OR/L.5 p.105. RoyalMed.
Hist., 1986, 4: 383-418, p. 383. Commission on National Museums and
Galleries,
16 CMACIWA/HMM/CO/Hme, HMM/ Oral evidence, memoranda and
appendices to theRE/A, and HMM/PB/Han/1-14. final report, London,
HMSO, 1929.
394
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Wellcome and "The Great Past"
Figure 3: The Hall of Primitive Medicine, Wellcome Historical
Medical Museum, 54 WigmoreStreet, c.1928. (CMAC/WA/PHO/Kel/B.3,
Welicome Library, London.)
displays (Figure 3). Wellcome's Museum was for "intellectual
people", "those genu-inely concerned and interested in the subjects
represented there who attend and studyfor beneficial information",
academics, scientists, "colonial and military officials,explorers,
colonisers, planters, missionaries" would find it useful. And it
was not for"stragglers", or "to gratify those who wish to view
strange and curious objects".19This was confirmed by the fact that,
except for the medical profession, entrance tothe Museum was
through prior written application only.
Wellcome's loose and broad profile for his Museum and the amount
of money hewas prepared to spend on it resulted in the amassing of
about one million objectsby the time of his death. As well as
containing all sorts of artefacts, books andpaintings relating to
the history of medicine from many diverse cultures, it alsoincluded
large quantities of weapons, model ships, bales of fabric,
furniture, ancientcooking implements, porcelain, glassware,
spectacles, statuary, coins, medals, orientaland western
antiquities, objets d'art, potsherds, torture instruments, human
remainsand "ethnographical" items.20The Historical Medical Museum
archive is fairly comprehensive, containing records
from its genesis in 1903 to final dispersal in 1985, and is much
more than a resourcefor those studying simply the history of
r!edicine. The activities of the Museum asa whole and the
collecting role of senior staff and curators are detailed in a
seriesof reports to Henry Wellcome or the Wellcome Foundation and
Trust bodies,
'9Ibid., OR/L.5, and OR/L.i1.20Skinner, op. cit., note 15 above,
p. 383.
395
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Amanda Engineer
1915-1968.21 These include reports by Wellcome's Curator C J S
Thompson and hissuccessor Dr L W G Malcolm, detailing visits to
dealers, auction houses, privatevendors, museums and libraries in
Britain and abroad. Also retained are the traveldiaries, or daily
logs, of Captain P Johnston-Saint, the Museum's 'Foreign
Secretary'who toured Europe, the Middle East and India collecting
objects and establishinginternational contacts. Throughout,
Wellcome kept close control over the collecting,marking up sale
catalogues and deciding purchasing prices.
Details of day-to-day and longer-term activities of the Museum
and its staff,notably acquisition, accession and transfer of
materials, arrangements of exhibitions(including the Historical
Medical Exhibition of 1913), researcher and visitor
feedback,internal administration and publicity, are also extremely
well represented. A massiveseries of correspondence,22 covering
over 300 pages in the catalogue, reads like adirectory of persons
and organizations, containing something for everyone.
Or-ganizations, national and overseas, range from the well known,
e.g. the Royal Collegeof Physicians and the American Museum of
Natural History, to the more obscure,e.g. the Society for Training
Serbian Women and the London Rambling Society.There is
correspondence with Margaret Murray, Sir Ronald Ross, Rafael
Sabatini,Sir Aurel Stein, Louisa Aldrich-Blake, Hilary Jenkinson,
Professor BronislawMalinowski, Sir James Frazer, Eric Gill, Sir
George Newman, Jacob Epstein, SirAlexander Fleming, Cecil Sharp and
Sir Robert Baden-Powell. To give an idea ofthe vast and diverse
range of subjects covered in the correspondence, a randomselection
produced files on the following: gift of an old enema syringe,
acquisitionof Egyptian antiquities, women's work in the First World
War, collection of Jenneritems and the history of vaccination,
Arabic tradition of the affliction ofJob [syphilis],Arab silver
charm and opium pipe, drawings illustrating the mental development
ofthe blind, native Persian dental instruments and cupping glasses,
cast of Romanvotive offering, gift of witchdoctor's kit from East
Africa, purchase of microscopes,Egyptian, Bolivian, Peruvian
mummies, prehistoric implements, loan of objects forfilm Lady Jane
Grey to Gainsborough Pictures, portrait of Sir Charles Bell,
SherlockHolmes Exhibition, purchase of African and Japanese musical
instruments, herbsfor exhibition, and David Livingstone's
instruments and Bible. The correspondencealso includes a series of
files on excavations carried out in Caldey Island, SouthWales, in
the 1950s, in which the Museum employee A D Lacaille was
involved.
Also to be found in the archive are records relating to major
exhibitions mountedby the Museum,23 most notably the Lister
Exhibition of 1927, which marked thecentenary of the birth of Lord
Lister. The centrepiece of this event was Lister's Wardfrom the
Glasgow Royal Infirmary, which had been transferred to the Museum
afterdemolition of the hospital in 1924. In 1930 the tercentenary
of the first recognizeduse ofcinchona bark by Europeans was marked,
and in 1937 the Museum participatedin the famous Paris Exhibition
which celebrated the arts, industry and science. Aswell as files
ofcorrespondence relating to the loan of materials, there are
photographs,invitations, souvenir guides and handbooks produced for
exhibitions held by the
21 CMAC/WA/HMM/RP. 23 CMAC/WA/HMM/EX and HMM/PB/Han.22
CMAC/WA/HMM/CO.
396
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Wellcome and "The Great Past"
Figure 4: A selection of printed ephemera advertising various
Wellcome events and institutions,1913-1931. (CMAC/WA/PB/Han/l, 5
and 10 and WA/PB/Sam 1, 4 and 5, Wellcome Library,London.)
Museum when it was located at Wigmore Street, Portman Square and
Euston Road(Figure 4).
397
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Amanda Engineer
In addition to the routine activities of acquiring and
displaying artefacts, there isa wealth of information relating to
the technical management of the Museumcollections, including
accession registers, notebooks, cataloguing slips, inventorycards,
files on major individual collections, diaries and financial
records. There arealso records of the transfer and disposal of
objects from the 1930s onwards. Thebulk of the collection was
transferred to museums both in the UK and abroad, mostnotably the
British Museum, Science Museum and the Pitt Rivers Museum,
Oxford.24A great deal was separately disposed of via auction houses
and dealers. With therecords it is possible to trace the origins
and final destinations of most parts of thecollection. Using a
specially prepared guidance leaflet,25 available in the
WellcomeLibrary, coupled with patience, it may be possible to
locate records relating to thetransfer of a specific object.
However, this can be a complicated business and thereis no
guarantee that records exist for every item.The Wellcome Archive is
an important resource for a study on the development
of museums in the twentieth century. It provides information on
collecting policiesand methods, practical museum management, the
professionalization of museumcurators and other staff, philosophy
behind museums and their purpose, theory andexplanation of
arrangement of exhibits and displays, and their perception by
visitors,researchers and learned societies. The evolution of the
displays, room design andexhibition layouts are also
photographically illustrated (Figure 5).26 In many waysHenry
Wellcome's Museum was a very personal collection. The design was
dominatedby his preoccupation with primitive origins and the idea
of the history of medicineas an extension of man's instinct for
self-preservation. This evolutionist school ofthought was also
characterized by attitudes to non-white races made popular
byAfrican explorer-missionaries in the nineteenth and early
twentieth centuries, withwhom Wellcome was closely associated (see
correspondence with Henry Stanley,27May French Sheldon,28 the
African Society29 and Anthropological Society30).Wellcome intended
his Museum to illustrate the development of medicine from
the"primitive" to the modern within an anthropological framework
based on a modeldeveloped in the 1880s. The Museum Handbook of 1920
stated that "one of thechief aims of the Museum is to connect the
links in the chain of human experience
24 a summary of the accession andtransfer of objects see
Georgina Russell, 'TheWellcome non-medical material',
MuseumsJournal, 1986, 86, Supplement.
25'WA/HMM Wellcome Historical MedicalMuseum Archives. Museum
Objects: accessionand transfer records. A guide for
researchers'issued by the Wellcome Library, 2000.
26 See CMACIWA/PHO/Hmm, PHO/Mms andPHO/Kel.
27 See Special Collections at the RoyalGeographical Society,
London.
28 See CMACIWA/HSW/CO/Gen and WA/HMM/CO/Chr, or via database
search on'Sheldon'.
29See particularly CMAC/WA/HMM/CO/Alp/6.
30 See particularly CMAC/WA/HMM/CO/Chr,or via database search on
'anthropological'. Ofparticular interest is HMM/CO/Sub/2
containingan 'Anthropological Questionnaire' distributed bythe
Royal Empire Society. In the 1920s, thisinvolved the museum in the
collection of data on"the races of the Empire" including
photographs,measurements and "food of natives" in Africa.Also
HMM/PB/Pub/27, a memoranda notebook"concerning the collection of
information andmaterial among primitive peoples" issued by
theMuseum c. 1927, with sections on deities, nativemedicine men or
witch doctors, disease, surgery,medical treatment, poisons,
superstitions, familylife and customs, childbirth, burial,
astrology,weapons, currency, weighing and artisticworkmanship.
398
-
Figure 5: Material illustrating primitive knowledge of
physiology, in the Hall of PrimitiveMedicine, Wellcome Historical
Medical Museum, Wellcome Building, Euston Road,
1947.(CMAC/WA/PHO/Hmm/4, Wellcome Library, London.)
399
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Amanda Engineer
(i-.e;..st I. > : _,..
Figure 6: Drawing of the Wellcome Physiological Research
Laboratories, Brockwell Hall,1898-1922. (CMAC/VA/PHO/Kel/A.1,
Wellcome Library, London.)
which stretches back from the present time into the prehistoric
period of the earlyages".3 Artefacts were often displayed out of
all cultural context, with modernmaterials representing the
primitive or prehistoric: "in many of the practices andcustoms
common among primitive races today, in the treatment of disease, we
finda reflection of what medicine must have been in very early
times in Europe".32 Theseideas were fast becoming unfashionable in
the twentieth century and were not sharedby many of those given the
task of maintaining the collections. Between 1936 and1976 many
ethnographic and prehistoric items which seemed more appropriate
toother disciplines than the history of medicine were dispersed.33
In this dispersal somematerial which would now be deemed cultural
property was returned to its countryof origin, making the Wellcome
Trustees some way ahead of their time in politicalcorrectness.
The Wellcome Research Laboratories
Records of the scientific research institutions set up by Henry
Wellcome form anintegral part of the Wellcome Archive.34
Unfortunately this is one of the archive'sweakest areas for primary
sources. Some details of the work of the WellcomePhysiological
Research Laboratories (Figures 6 and 7), established in 1894
(originallyset up to produce diphtheria anti-toxin), and the
Wellcome Chemical ResearchLaboratories, established in 1896, can be
found in monthly reports to the Directorof the Wellcome Bureau of
Scientific Research, 1914-1922.35 These are supplementedby a
handful of correspondence files in the Chemical Research
Laboratories sectioncovering subjects such as the production of
ephedrine hypochloride, sulphonamidesand East African cinchona;36 a
series of reprints of articles published by staff of
thePhysiological Research Laboratories,37 particularly eminent
researchers such asGeorge Barger, Henry Dale and Arthur James
Ewins; and general guides andhistorical publications.38 The work of
the Wellcome Tropical Research Laboratories,Khartoum (Figure 8),
set up in 1903 by Andrew Balfour and equipped by Henry
3 CMAC/WA/HMM/PB/Han/17 p. 6. 35CMAC/WA/BSR/BA/Crl and BA/Prl.32
Ibid., p. 9. 36 CMAC/WA/CRL/CO.33Skinner, op. cit., note 15 above,
p. 418. 37CMACIWA/PRL/PB/Sta.3 CMAC/WA/CRL, WA/PRL, WA/TRL and 38
CMAC/WA/CRL/PB, CRL/HI and WA/
WA/BSR. PRL/PB/Gen.
400
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Wellcome and "The Great Past"
Figure 7: Pharmacological Laboratory, Wellcome Physiological
Research Laboratories,Brockwell Hall, c.1940s.
(CMAC/WAIPHO/Kel/A.2, Wellcome Library, London.)
Wellcome,39 is mainly represented in the laboratories' annual
reports,4" which containillustrations, scholarly articles and
contributions by staff on their research, andreports of the
Entomological and Chemical sections.41 Originals of photographs
usedin the annual reports and images of the innovatory "floating
laboratory", towed bya tug called The Culex, which carried research
to the river settlements are also held.42Files generated
internally, or on site, and revealing the day-to-day
administrationand scientific experimental methods of the three
major Wellcome laboratories donot appear to have survived. This is
a great shame and goes some way towardslimiting the usefulness of
the resource for those studying tropical diseases andmedicine,
methods used in isolation and production of new chemical
substances,pharmacological testing, the development of
physiological research, vivisection andgovernment policy on animal
experimentation (Burroughs Wellcome was the firstcommercial
manufacturer to register with the Home Office under the Cruelty
toAnimals Act 1876).
Fortunately, records of Wellcome's Bureau of Scientific
Research43 are rather more
39The Tropical Research Laboratories were Awad Abdel-Hameed,
'The Wellcome Tropicallargely sustained by the Sudan Government
Research Laboratories in Khartoumwhich maintained them and met
staffing costs. In (1903-1934)', Med Hist., 1997, 41: 30-58.1935
they were taken over by the Sudan Medical 4 CMAC/WA/TRL/Rep.Service
and three years later the Wellcome 41CMAC/WA/TRL/Pub/A and
B.Trustees withdrew support for them as the
42CMAC/WA/PHO/Trl.Wellcome name had been dropped. See Ahmed 43
CMAC/WA/BSR.
401
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Amanda Engineer.~~~~~... . .....
N~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~.......
== ! -w.-o
Figure 8: Staffofthe Tropical Research Laboratories, Gordon
College, Khartoum, c. December1910. In the front row: Henry
Wellcome in the centre, Dr Andrew Balfour, Director of
theLaboratories, to the left, and James Currie, Director of
Education (Sudan Government) tothe right. (CMAC/WA/PHO/Trl/B.4,
Wellcome Library, London.)
elaborative and, importantly, fill in some gaps in the papers of
the Chemical,Physiological and Tropical Research Laboratories." The
Bureau was established in1913 and was clearly intended by Wellcome
to be the hub of his research activities.Andrew Balfour returned
from the Sudan, where he had been Chief Health Officerof Khartoum
and Director of the Tropical Research Laboratories for the
previousten years, to direct the Bureau and was given general
responsibility for all Wellcome'sscientific research laboratories
and museums. Of particular interest is the large seriesof records
covering his period of directorship, 1913-1923, which relate not
only tothe work of the Bureau and its constituent departments but
also to Balfour's owninterests and activities in military and
tropical medicine and public health.45 Histravel diaries during
expeditions to the West Indies and South America in 1914"and
Mauritius in 1921 to investigate sanitary conditions are included
in this sectionof the archive. Balfour was involved with various
organizations, and his records
" For accounts, by former staff, of the Wellcome's Legacies,
London, The Wellcomedevelopment of Wellcome's tropical medicine
Trust, 1998.institutions and the chemical research
45CMAC/WA/BSR/BA.laboratories, see L G Goodwin and E Beveridge, 46
set of photographs of local people, the'Sir Henry Wellcome and
tropical medicine' and J environment and diseases taken during the
SouthH Gorvin, 'The development of chemical research American
expedition are retained in thein the Wellcome Laboratories (UK)
1896-1965' in photographic section, CMAC/WA/PHO/Bsr/1.
402
-
Wellcome and "The Great Past"
...* I ev_,,, ,,., i
Figure 9: A laboratory, Wellcome Chemical Research Laboratories,
6 King Street, 1899.(CMAC/WA/PHO/Kel/A.6, Wellcome Library,
London.)
include correspondence with the Floating School Committee set up
by the RoyalSociety of Medicine, and the Egyptian Health Ministry
relating to his work asPresident of the Public Health Commission on
sanitary services in Egypt (TheBalfour Commission), covering
1918-1920. There are papers relating to research byBureau staff on
malaria and sleeping sickness, including work done on behalf of
theWar Office, 1914-1919, and investigations carried out by T A
Henry in the ChemicalResearch Laboratories on the medicinal
properties of plants, 1918-1923. Amongstthe staff records are files
on Dr Louis Sambon, an expert on tropical medicine, andMalcolm E
MacGregor, who headed the Wellcome Entomological Field
Laborat-ories.47 The Bureau archive also contains a large number of
reprints of articleswritten by staff members on their research.
These cover topics such as yellow fever,mosquitoes, Trypanosoma
Grayi parasites in the tsetse fly and Rift Valley Fever.For a long
time Wellcome rebutted accusations concerning the close
connection
between the scientific and business arms of his "empire",
preferring to stress theacademic and altruistic aspects of the
research laboratories.'4 However, the evidenceagainst this existed
from early on. The development of the diphtheria anti-toxin
andother preparations clearly contributed to the prestige and
success of BurroughsWellcome & Co. The Chemical Research
Laboratories had a close relationship with
4 For papers on the Entomological Field 48See Rhodes James, op.
cit., note 2 above,Laboratories see also CMAC/WA/BSR/Efl and
p.190.WA/HMM/CO/Wel/B.3.
403
-
Amanda Engineer
the firm-processes initiated there were often developed for
large-scale productionand many staff moved between the labs and
manufacturing works. Even HenryDale, who worked at Wellcome's
Physiological Research Laboratories, stated in1910 that "whilst
devoted primarily to original research, ... the laboratories
have... also performed much work of a nature more directly
applicable to the needs ofMr Wellcome's firm".49 Papers of the
Bureau's Scientific Research Committee, setup in 1925 specifically
to advise on areas of research for commercial development,contain
the promise of revealing the extent to which the later scientific
research wascommercially exploited by the firm.
Conclusion
Considering the amount and range of material it contains, the
Wellcome Archiveis at present greatly under-used and the full
extent of its value cannot be realizeduntil it is more thoroughly
researched. Hitherto, access has been limited by lack offinding
aids, and some researchers may be deterred by the size and
complexity ofthe catalogue. However, perseverance will bring rich
rewards. And one does nothave to be interested in Henry Wellcome
per se to find the records useful. The archiveis a primary source
for a plethora of topics including animal
experimentation,anthropology, archaeology, art, architecture,
charity and philanthropy, Dartfordlocal history, the employment of
women, entomology, ethnography, London society,missionary
explorers, museum management, native Americans, pharmacy,
primitivemedicine, public health and sanitation, racial theories,
photography, Sudan medicalservices, travel, tropical diseases,
weaponry, and welfare schemes for factory workers.
It has been difficult to dojustice to the Wellcome Archive in
this article. Certain aspectshave unavoidably been left out, not
least records relating to the Weilcome Library,which existed as a
section of the Historical Medical Museum from 1903-1960,5°the
Wellcome Museum of Medical Science (originally the Wellcome Museum
ofTropical Medicine and Hygiene)5' set up by Andrew Balfour in 1914
from materialhe had collected during his service at the Tropical
Research Laboratories; and acollection of glass lantern slides
illustrating Wellcome's museums and researchinstitutions, which
were unified under the title of the Wellcome Research Institutionin
1931.52 It is hoped that historians will investigate this important
archive and ifthey have any queries contact one of the archivists
in the Contemporary MedicalArchives Centre at the Wellcome Library
for the History and Understanding ofMedicine (The Wellcome Trust,
183 Euston Road, London NWI 2BE, Email:[email protected]).
49 E M Tansey and Rosemary C E Milligan, ' See
CMAC/WA/HMM/RP/Hmm and'The early history of the Wellcome Research
HMM/LI.Laboratories, 1894-1914', in J Liebenau, et al., 5' See
CMAC/WA/MMS.Pill peddlers: essays on the history of the 52 See
CMACIWAIPHOIKel.pharmaceutical industry, Madison, WI,
AmericanInstitute for the History of Pharmacy, 1990, pp.91-106.
404